Mr Facing-Both-Ways: Debussy stands out in French quartet's visit
Ebene Quartet paid its third visit here with different personnel In "The Pilgrim's Progress," Mr. Facing Both Ways is an allegorical no-no in the strict Christian terms of someone who cannot resist looking on both the sacred and profane paths forward. This amounted to one of the author John Bunyan's warnings against waywardness. In musical terms, the evidence of a divided consciousness may also be labeled a fault. Yet Claude Debussy succeeded in forging a new musical style that has amazingly found acceptance among music-lovers with conservative tastes for almost a century and a half. Still, innovation is basic to everything he wrote. My predecessor as music critic for the Michigan newspaper I worked for long ago memorably dismissed "impressionism" (a term Debussy rejected but continues to adhere to his music) as "the petering-out of well-worn romantic trails." But such a performance as the Ebene Quartet laid down of the French composer's St...